The mystery of the smelly stream... the strong beer in Hawaii is solved
The mystery of the strong beer-smelling stream in Hawaii was recently solved when scientists discovered that spring water has 1.2% ABV (alcohol by volume or milliliters of alcohol in 100ml of liquid).
The long-standing smell of beer in Hawaii's spring water has remained a mystery for a long time. But the cause of this has been discovered.
Accordingly, it turned out that a storm drain from a nearby brewery was responsible for turning spring water into alcohol.
The storm drain was then blocked. The pipeline runs from Paradise Beverage, a wine and beer warehouse on the other side of a nearby highway.
According to Hawaii News Now, a sample from the stream, located in the town of Waipio on the island of Oahu, showed "up to 1.2% alcohol content" in the water and "about 0.04% of its content" as sugar.
Paradise Benks still does not know what caused the spill and is working with local authorities to find out what caused it.
Anthony Rowe, the company's chief operating officer, said: "Right now, we've had the Department of Transport send a representative to inspect and we're working with them. We've also been in contact with the Department. Medican".
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